National Geographic History - 03.2019 - 04.2019

(Brent) #1

DISCOVERIES


Geography,some historians
identified Ay Khanom as
Alexandria in Oxus. Later
scholarship, however, casts
doubt on this. Although its
original name is still a mys-
tery, it is plausible it was
founded as a garrison town
by one of Alexander’s men.
After Alexander’s death

of his generals, Seleucus,
founder of the Seleucid
empire, and succeeded by
his son, Antiochus I. Later,
local Bactrian kings began
asserting their own rule in
the region, while still iden-
tifying with Greek culture.
These cultures and re-
ligions left their mark on
the city. Inscriptions reveal
Iranian and Bactrian names
alongside Greek ones. The
temple was dedicated to a
deity that combined Zeus

with the Indo-Iranian god
of light, Mithra. Objects
attest to the mingling of
Greek symbols with those
of Zoroastrianism, Hindu-
ism, and Buddhism. But the
city was attracting covet-
ous glances: Circa 145 B.C. it
was sacked by nomads and
later abandoned.

Fortunes of War
War plagued Afghanistan in
the 1980s and ’90s, damag-
ing the site at Ay Khanom. In

2001 the struggle to topple
the Taliban regime raged in
the area. Despite attempts to
salvage the site’s treasures,
many were lost— stolen by
looters or deliberately de-
stroyed by the Taliban.
Fortunately other items
had been secreted away in
bank vaults for safekeep-
ing. Recovered in 2004,
these treasures formed
part of a 2007-08 exhibi-
tion that toured the United
States and Europe. Orga-
nized by the National Geo-
graphic Society, the display
presented to the admiring
gaze of the world the trea-
sures of Ay Khanom once
thought to have been lost
for ever.
—Juan Pablo Sánchez

Thecity’stemplewasdedicatedtoa
eitythatcombinedZeuswiththe
ndo-Iraniangodoflight,Mithra.

After Alexander s death
in 323B.C.,his eastern ter-
ritories were ruledbyone

T
d
In

REFUGE IN THE TEAROOM
In 2001 a French aid agency converted this
tearoom near Ay Khanom into a store in which
to safeguard artifacts from the site that had not
been destroyed by the war or stolen by looters.
KENNETH GARRETT/ALAMY/ACI

DIVINE FOOT, FROM A STATUE OF ZEUS-MITHRA AT AY KHANOM. NATIONAL MUSEUM, KABUL
AKG/ALBUM
Free download pdf